Referring to source code

GitHub offers really powerful ways to refer to specific lines of code. And not only that, it also offers powerful ways to find those specific lines of code to begin with.

Finding a file – quickly

After pointing the web browser to a specific repository, typing the T key will let you type out parts of the file name and hit ⌅ Enter when the file in question is at the top of the list (you can also navigate the list using the cursor keys).

Linking to specific lines

Hitting the L key lets you jump to a specific line (and modifies the URL which you can then send around to refer to that line).

After one line is selected already, you can select a line range by ⇧ Shift-clicking on the line number of the other end of the line range.

Permalinks

After you found the link for the file in question, it most likely refers to the current version of the file.

However, once development advances, the file's contents might change in the meantime, or the file might even go away! To provide a link to a specific revision of the file, just hit the Y key to modify the URL to a permanent link (it will then reference the exact commit, instead of a branch).

Ignore whitespace changes in diffs

Sometimes, a commit will mix whitespace changes with other changes, making the functional changes more difficult to isolate. Fortunately, there is an easy workaround:

GitHub provides the same functionality, too: just append ?w=1 to the URL (or &w=1 if there are already GET parameters).

Editing files

If you want to modify some file's contents and you are certain that the changes do not need to be tested locally, you can hit the Edit button on the upper right corner after navigating to the file in question (in case you don't have Push permission on the repository in question, this will fork the project at the same time). This will let you edit the file online and commit the changes after providing a commit message (you should still try to write a meaningful commit message, of course).

Working with Pull Requests

Pull Requests are a really neat way to work together. The idea is that Git makes it very easy and efficient to clone a project's entire revision history, develop a bit, and then offer the improvements in a manner that is easy for the original project's developers to merge.

Common workflow

Let's assume that you want to provide a fix for a vexing bug in one of your favorite Fiji plugins. The first thing is to fork it – meaning to copy the entire revision history into your personal GitHub space – unless you have done so already. Then you clone that onto your computer (again, unless you have done so already). Make your changes, commit them, push them and then make a Pull Request. See the excellent page How to contribute to an existing plugin or library for a detailed walk-through.

Testing Pull Requests before merging them

GitHub makes it very, very easy to merge Pull Requests simply by hitting a button. Of course you should review the changes before you do so: remember that the quality of open-source software is high only because many developers throw their cumulative expertise together to make something that is better than each individual developer could have developed on their own.

You might even want to test the code locally before merging. This is really easy because GitHub provides not only the test whether a Pull Request can be merged cleanly, but it also offers the revision in the form of the refs/pull/<ID>/merge pseudo branches.

Please note that those pseudo branches (which are called refs in Git Speak) are not fetched or cloned automatically, they have to be fetch explicitly.